FIVB Volleyball World Grand Champions Cup

The FIVB Volleyball World Grand Champions Cup was an international volleyball competition contested by the senior men's and women's national teams of the members of Fédération Internationale de Volleyball (FIVB), the sport's global governing body. The tournament was created in 1993 after radical changes made on the biggest tournaments organised by the FIVB. The main goal was not to have a single year without two high-profile world-level volleyball competitions, alongside the pre-existing men's and women's world championship, men's and women's world cup and the volleyball tournament at the Olympic Games which are all quadrennial and the annual men's and women's Nations League.

FIVB Volleyball World Grand Champions Cup
SportVolleyball
Founded1993
Inaugural season1993 (Men, Women)
Ceased2017 (Men, Women)
Replaced byFIVB Volleyball World Championship
No. of teams6
ContinentInternational (FIVB)
Last
champion(s)
M:  Brazil
     (5th title)
W:  China
     (2nd title)
Most titlesM:  Brazil
     (5 titles)
W:  Brazil
       China
     (2 titles each)

The World Grand Champions Cup was therefore played quadrennially the year after the Olympic Games and is always hosted by the Japan Volleyball Association. It did not give any points for the World Ranking.

Brazil has been the most successful team in the men's tournament, having won five of the seven editions. Brazil has also finished runners-up to Cuba and Italy in the only two occasions claimed by other national teams. The women's tournament history is more balanced with Brazil and China having won the tournament twice, while Cuba, Italy, and Russia have won one title each.

History

The World Grand Champions Cup was created in 1993 after radical changes made on the biggest tournaments organised by the FIVB. The main goal was not to have a single year without a world FIVB competition. This is the only FIVB tournament that doesn't give FIVB points for the world ranking.

On 22 June, 2023, Volleyball Calendar 2025–2028 approved by FIVB shown that World Championships to be played biannually in odd years. That meant the World Grand Champions Cup was discontinued and replaced by World Championships.[1]

Winners

Brazil has been the most successful team with the men's team winning five and the women's team two titles.

Competition formula

The World Grand Champions Cup has always had the same formula since the first edition:

  • The competition takes place in Japan.
  • Six teams participate in each event: host nation, four continental champions and one wild card.
  • Japan is always pre-qualified as the host nation.
  • Four continental champions from continents whose teams reached the highest ranking at the preceding Olympic Games.
  • The remaining team participates through a wild card granted by the FIVB.
  • A round robin format is used for this competition.
  • Final standings are calculated by usual volleyball criteria: until 2013 match points, numbers of matches won, sets ratio (the total number of sets won divided by the total number of sets lost), points ratio, direct confrontation; since 2017 the first criterion became the number of matches won, followed by match points, sets ratio etc.

Results summary

Men

Year Round-robin
Champions Runners-up 3rd place 4th place 5th place 6th place
1993
Details

Italy

Brazil

Cuba

Japan

United States

South Korea
1997
Details

Brazil

Netherlands

Cuba

China

Japan

Australia
2001
Details

Cuba

Brazil

FR Yugoslavia

South Korea

Japan

Argentina
2005
Details

Brazil

United States

Italy

Japan

Egypt

China
2009
Details

Brazil

Cuba

Japan

Poland

Iran

Egypt
2013
Details

Brazil

Russia

Italy

Iran

United States

Japan
2017
Details

Brazil

Italy

Iran

United States

France

Japan

Women

Year Round-robin
Champions Runners-up 3rd place 4th place 5th place 6th place
1993
Details

Cuba

China

Russia

Japan

United States

Peru
1997
Details

Russia

Cuba

Brazil

China

Japan

South Korea
2001
Details

China

Russia

Japan

Brazil

United States

South Korea
2005
Details

Brazil

United States

China

Poland

Japan

South Korea
2009
Details

Italy

Brazil

Dominican Republic

Japan

South Korea

Thailand
2013
Details

Brazil

United States

Japan

Russia

Thailand

Dominican Republic
2017
Details

China

Brazil

United States

Russia

Japan

South Korea

Medals summary

Men

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Brazil5207
2 Cuba1124
 Italy1124
4 Netherlands0101
 Russia0101
 United States0101
7 FR Yugoslavia0011
 Iran0011
 Japan0011
Totals (9 entries)77721

Women

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Brazil2215
2 China2114
3 Russia1113
4 Cuba1102
5 Italy1001
6 United States0213
7 Japan0022
8 Dominican Republic0011
Totals (8 entries)77721

All-time team records

Number of matches
1 Japan 35
2 Brazil 30
3 Republic of Korea 25
4 China 25
5 Russia 25
6 United States 25
7 Cuba 10
8 Dominican Republic 10
9 Thailand 10
10 Poland 5
Wins
1 Brazil 22
2 China 19
3 Russia 14
4 United States 14
5 Japan 13
6 Cuba 9
7 Italy 5
8 Dominican Republic 4
9 Republic of Korea 3
10 Poland 1
Number of wins in games played
1 Italy 100 %
2 Cuba 90 %
3 China 76 %
4 Brazil 73 %
5 Russia 56 %
6 United States 56 %
7 Dominican Republic 40 %
8 Japan 37 %
9 Poland 20 %
10 Republic of Korea 12 %


(Based on W=2 pts and D=1 pts)

Team S Firs Best Pts MP W L GF GA diff
1 Brazil 6 1997 1st 52 30 22 8 76 32 +44
2 Japan 7 1993 3rd 48 35 13 22 55 74 -19
3 China 5 1993 1st 44 25 19 6 61 32 +29
4 Russia 5 1993 1st 39 25 14 11 55 45 +10
5 United States 5 1993 2nd 39 25 14 11 52 48 +4
6 Republic of Korea 5 1997 5th 28 25 3 22 14 71 -57
7 Cuba 2 1993 1st 19 10 9 1 28 10 +18
8 Dominican Republic 2 2009 3rd 14 10 4 6 15 20 -5
9 Thailand 2 2009 5th 11 10 1 9 8 28 -20
10 Italy 1 2009 1st 10 5 5 0 15 3 +12
11 Poland 1 2005 5th 6 5 1 4 7 14 -7
12 Peru 1 1993 6th 5 5 0 5 6 15 -9

MVP by edition

See also

References

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